Camera Lens Focus Modes
I'm never going to see the "auto focus / manual focus" switch the same after this...
Random photo-related musings along with my joys and woes as a photographer trying to manage teaching, making photos, family, and life.
I'm never going to see the "auto focus / manual focus" switch the same after this...
Posted by Steve Stenzel at 5:15 PM 0 comments
I found this in one of the classrooms where I teach at the University of Minnesota:
Posted by Steve Stenzel at 1:02 PM 0 comments
Labels: Book, Color Theory, CVA, Teaching, University of Minnesota
Just like we did last year, my students recently made some prints on the design department's 44" printer:
[click to enlarge]
Posted by Steve Stenzel at 7:39 PM 0 comments
Labels: Concordia University, Teaching
Here's a 0:30 video of a unique process for making some camera/skeleton art from CarlNeedsAJob on Instagram:
Posted by Steve Stenzel at 9:29 PM 0 comments
A photo showed up in my Facebook Memories, and I had to share the longer story. This was the first image that ended up turning into the 4 a.m. series before I knew it was going to turn into a series.
Posted by Steve Stenzel at 4:13 PM 0 comments
Labels: 4 a.m.
A few days ago, this memory popped up on Facebook:
Posted by Steve Stenzel at 2:06 PM 0 comments
Labels: Concordia University, Darkroom, Teaching
Here are some pics from the faculty exhibition that I was in a few months ago at Concordia University:
[click each image to enlarge]
Posted by Steve Stenzel at 6:01 PM 0 comments
Labels: 4 a.m., Concordia University, Exhibitions
We've had a few successful days of processing film in class this week:
Posted by Steve Stenzel at 10:04 PM 0 comments
Labels: Camera, Concordia University, Darkroom, Video
I found this outside of the art room at Blake High School in Minneapolis:
Posted by Steve Stenzel at 10:17 AM 0 comments
Labels: Philip-Lorca diCorcia, Quote
I teach a "pre-design" class at the University of Minnesota geared toward first-year graphic design majors. We cover basic design elements and principles, but then also discuss a lot about how designers can "control" how a viewer relates to imagery based on how it's communicated to them. It's part "2D Design" and part "Visual Conceptualization"... sort of.
After basically 1 type lecture and an hour intro to Adobe Illustrator, here are a few movie poster projects from this past semester:
Posted by Steve Stenzel at 2:51 PM 0 comments
Labels: Design, Teaching, University of Minnesota
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